{five minute friday} How to Get Your Chalkboard Wall Back to Black!

Friday, July 18, 2014

Ever since we first painted the magnetic chalkboard wall in our kitchen, I have been on a mission to figure out how to get it clean. I mean really clean... as in back to the way it looked when it was new. Back to black!

The constant white/gray haze drove me crazy! Because our chalkboard wall reaches all the way to the ceiling, we never draw or write on the top of it, meaning that the wall isn't even consistently grey. Instead it is nice and clean on the top - and progressively worse as it gets closer to the floor {where little hands can reach}. Now I like ombre as much as the next girl, but this just isn't a good look.

I've tried repeatedly to the clean the wall with a damp cloth, with a sponge, you name it. With water it would look clean when it was wet, but as it dried the grey, smeary mess would reappear! My older son was always frustrated because it was hard to even see his drawings on top of the constant haze of chalk on our wall.

Months ago I did a bunch of research to find a better way to get the chalkboard clean, and I came across the same suggestion a handful of times. But I just couldn't bring myself to try it. It just made me too nervous. But finally I had enough and I decided it was worth a shot. So I popped open a can of Coke, enjoyed a few sips, and then used it to clean my wall.

Yep, that's right. Coke! Coke is apparently the secret to a clean, and I mean clean, chalkboard wall.

I was extremely skeptical about this. I envisioned it being a sticky mess! So I was shocked pleasantly surprised that it worked and it didn't leave any sticky residue or film on the wall!

Coke came up time and again when I researched how to clean the wall, but I couldn't find any good instructions. Maybe it's just my type-A personality, but I like instructions! So I thought I'd share my method. It was quick and easy, and in about five minutes my chalkboard wall looked like it was brand new!

Step 1: Clean the Wall with a Chalk Eraser
I started by using a chalk eraser to remove at least a little bit of the excess chalk from the wall.

You'll notice that our wall looks textured. It was actually a smooth wall when we started out, but the magnetic primer that we used under the chalkboard paint created a bit of texture. {For more details on magnetic primer, you can read my full review.} This texture makes our chalk wall extra hard to clean, because all of the chalk dust settles down in.

Step 2: Clean With Coke on a Sponge

I started by pouring just enough Coke to cover to bottom of my bowl {I ended up pouring more in as I went, but I'd start with just a little - no need to waste a good Coke!}. Because of the slight texture on the wall, I decided that a sponge would probably be more effective than a rag, so I cut a sponge in half {a better size to fit my bowl} and dipped the sponge in the Coke.

I squeezed the excess Coke back into the bowl so that sponge was wet, but not dripping.

Then I began to clean the wall with the sponge, applying moderate pressure. Immediately I could see that it was working.

Step 3: Rinse and Repeat
The sponge very quickly became covered in chalk. So I rinsed it off with water in the sink, wrang all water out of the sponge, and then dipped the sponge back in the Coke and continued to the clean the wall. I repeated this process until the entire wall was clean.

Some areas higher on the wall that were less chalk covered only required one thorough pass with the sponge to look perfectly clean, while the lower portion of the wall required that I wipe it down a second time to get it really clean.

Here's what the wall looked like with only one section left uncleaned. You can see that it is a drastic difference!

When I was done, the wall looked as good as the day we painted it!

Obviously it didn't stay looking like this for long, because as soon as my son saw it clean he immediately wanted to draw on it and use the DIY alphabet magnets that I made for him. Which was exactly the reaction I was hoping for!

I love seeing his scribbles on the wall, but I am also so happy to now know that I can get the wall clean when I want to. No more grey, smeary mess!

To get the full effect, here's the before and after! And don't forget to pin this so you'll remember the secret ingredient when you need it!

I did the magnetic paint and then the chalk board paint in the office. I did need to do a few coats of the magnetic paint for it to really work. My office wall looked like yours with not getting it all off. Trying tomorrow Thank you !!

Hi Angela, thank you for the post. Your wall looks great! I have 2 questions though.1. Did you wipe down the wall with clean water after you applied the coke all over?2. Did you have to condition the wall again before writing on it?Thanks for your help.

Hi Natasha. Nope - I didn't do either of those things. I've read time and again that water is actually really bad for the chalk paint, so I didn't wipe it down with water - nor did I need to. It dries perfectly. And I did not recondition the wall either. We've cleaned the board this way many times now, and never had any problems at all.

Just to be more specific - the reason I chose not to recondition the wall is that conditioning requires covering the entire wall in chalk and then wiping it all off. If I did that, I would have been back to square 1 with needing to use the coke to get the wall clean.

I found that the only way to get mine this clean is glass cleaner with ammonia. Haven't tried coke tho and haven't tried ammonia free it might work just as well. I will even hair spray my art so it sticks really good and the glass cleaner takes it right off.

Thank you! We recently moved my daughter's bedroom upstairs. She ran me crazy about making on wall chalkboard. Now that it's done we have issues of cleaning it. Can't wait to get off work to tell her about this. We will be trying this asap!

Hi Angela! We are redoing our kitchen and have a wall similar to yours and we have made it into a chalkboard wall also. We aren't even in the new kitchen yet, so no one has drawn on it, but I was already fretting about keeping it clean. I was happy to find your post. My question is - if I'm going to clean it with Coke, is it necessary to do the initial conditioning? I know you said above you wouldn't re-condition it so it got me thinking that maybe the initial conditioning was unnecessary? Thanks!

Sorry for my delayed response. I would still do the initial conditioning as called for my the paint. My understanding is that without that first conditioning, the very first things you write on the board might never clean off properly, so I wouldn't skip that step if it is called for in the paint instructions. The instructions on our paint didn't call for re-conditioning after each cleaning regardless of cleaning method, but I don't think that eliminates the need to condition and prepare the chalkboard for it's first use.

My only concern is bugs. I just tried this and it works great. We tried erasers, vinegar and water... Nothing worked. The coke made it look like a new wall! Coke has a lot of sugar so do I need to be concerned with bugs?

I have never had any problems with bugs, but I can only speak to our experience. We live in Denver, and bugs are not a problem here in general, but I don't know how it might be different in other regions/climates. In all the research I did prior to trying the Coke on our wall, I never read any comments about any one having problems with bugs.

Thank you for this post! I have a wall in my kitchen that has a small white board on it, and I have been dying to convert the whole wall to a chalkboard wall, but the idea of having to cover the whole wall with a layer of chalk after I clean it has had me holding off. So glad to hear that you haven't had the need to do that after the initial conditioning. I'll definitely read the back of the paint cans before I purchase. Thanks!!!

I'm very surprised to hear that, as I've used the ethos at least 20 times with no sticky residue and I've heard from many others who have had no problems at all. Did you use regular Coke, or some other cola? I'm not sure the results would be the same if you used diet or a different brand.

I know this is sort of unrelated, but... When your blackboard wall was fresh (as in not yet a week old), and if/ when you wiped it down with water, did you ever notice it begin to smell a bit again? I confess to having applied two coats of paint in the same day. But after that I let it dry for four days before touching it, finally rubbing chalk all over it and promptly erasing it with a damp sponge/ cloth kind of thing. My son and I have only used the thing twice at this point, so it definitely is fresh. But if the paint is totally dry and cured beyond the recommended wait time, why am I getting a fresh(er) paint smell upon wiping it down? Am I erasing too hard or doing something else wrong?

Breanna, I'm so sorry that I missed your question before. I didn't have this problem at all, so I don't know for sure what may have been happening. I have heard though that cleaning the wall with water can damage the paint. If your chalkboard paint was water based, I wonder if each time you used water to clean it, maybe you were reactivating the paint somehow and that's why it smelled like fresh paint?

The eraser I have is a Melissa and Doug brand that I picked up at a toy store... but I wouldn't say it's really that effective. In the photo above, you can see that it really just spread the chalk dust around and left a white haze on the chalkboard. When I clean the wall with coke, I just use a white rag. My boys still do like having the eraser though to use when they are drawing on the wall in between the times that I clean it off completely.

Hi there! I just found your site via Pinterest and am saving it for future reference. I am getting ready to paint a small wall in my kids bathroom with chalkboard paint. Any tips on painting it? I was told the wall can't have any texture, but our walls do have texture. Should I not paint it? And is there a problem later on re-painting over it? Thanks for any insight!

I haven't painted over mine yet, so I can't really answer that part. As for the texture on your walls, it really depends on how textured they are. If it's a "knock down" or "orange peel" texture, it may be really hard to write on the wall due to the texture.

I've never had that problem at all when using Coke to clean my chalkboard wall. I am guessing that the ingredients of Pepsi are different enough to be causing this problem. I would use Coke instead of Pepsi next time - and no need to clean it with water after using the Coke.

No, I would advise using only Coke and not Pepsi. I have not tested Pepsi, but the ingredients are not the same. With Coke, I have never had any problems with the chalk not erasing after, and I've been using it for several years now.

That's fab! Thanks so much for putting this down. I just moved into a place that has a chalk wall in the office which has a lot of 'historic' faded writing from the previous occupant. I considered re-paint, over paint etc as I couldn't seem to get it clean, then found this article. Thank you - off to buy some coke :D

Just did this on our work chalkwall that I've been dreading cleaning for the New Year refresh. Worked awesome! So glad I found this post before trying to clean it another way. I will note that we had chalk and chalk markers on our wall, the markers are really hard to get out, they almost stain the wall.

Thank you so very much for posting this! I have had a chalkboard wall in my kitchen for two years and never could get it as clean as the can of coke did! I was very hesitant with using coke on a wall - but you were right! THANK YOU!

Awesome ideas!! Do you still have your same chalkboard paint on your walls with the Ralph Lauren Emperor Blue?? And how many times have you re-coated your walls with the chalk paint since your very first application? Thank you from TX!

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